Carlystern Wrote:Just to clarify, I understand the correct answer (E), but I had NO clue how to format the CL. You can't really do it, here, can you? You just basically find the conclusion and assess each answer to follow the same logic, right?
Carly
Justified Action --> Person performing it has sufficient reason for action
Rational Action --> Justification forms an essential part of its explanation (AKA, sufficient reason for action must be part of cause for action)
A. Wrong because being Justified neither requires nor precludes having an explanation. 1st CL doesn't mention explanation.
B. Wrong because it not only reverses the 2nd CL, but it do so broadly: "any reason among the causes of an action" may not be a sufficient reason.
C. Other psychs. are irrelevant
D. Whether we can know the causes for action isn't discussed
E. This correct, but I think it can trip us up, since, like B, it's a bit broad. It doesn't replicate the 2nd CL exactly, as it omits "sufficient." However, this doesn't break it, since this broader statement still follows from the 2nd CL.
Moreover, it kind of restates the 2nd CL, which says that ALL rational actions will have reason as PART of explanation. E says that SOME rational actions will have reason as (presumably the ONLY) cause.
What I'm not sure about is how E gets past this issue: the 2nd CL mentions "part of explanation [ie cause]," but E implies that the reason must BE the cause.